<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div id="cvr">
<div><ANTIMG class="portrait" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Ukridge by P. G. Wodehouse" /></div>
</div>
<div class="titlepagelarge"> UKRIDGE </div>
<div class="titlepagemedium"> WHAT THIS STORY IS ABOUT </div>
<blockquote><p> “Do not count your chickens before they
are hatched” is a classic saying that might
well have been remembered by Ukridge.
Ukridge is always on the verge of making a
fortune and counting his thousands before
they are made. But Dame Fortune is a
fickle jade. She eludes him in his great
scheme about the dog college, wherein he was
to turn out a world supply of trained dogs,
and likewise in his backing of Battling Billson,
the tender-hearted pugilist. But hope
and George Tupper keep Ukridge going.
He is ever ready for the next assault.</p>
</blockquote>
<div class="titlepagemedium"> <i>BY THE SAME AUTHOR </i> </div>
<div> A DAMSEL IN DISTRESS <span class="money"> 2s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> THE COMING OF BILL <span class="money"> 3s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> THE GIRL ON THE BOAT <span class="money"> 2s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> THE CLICKING OF CUTHBERT <span class="money"> 3s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> JILL THE RECKLESS <span class="money"> 2s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> INDISCRETIONS OF ARCHIE <span class="money"> 2s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> PICCADILLY JIM <span class="money"> 2s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> LOVE AMONG THE CHICKENS <span class="money"> 2s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> A GENTLEMAN OF LEISURE <span class="money"> 2s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> THE ADVENTURES OF SALLY <span class="money"> 7s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> THE INIMITABLE JEEVES <span class="money"> 3s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> MY MAN JEEVES <span class="money"> 2s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div> LEAVE IT TO PSMITH <span class="money"> 7s. 6d. net. </span></div>
<div class="titlepagelarge"> UKRIDGE </div>
<div class="titlepagesmall"> BY </div>
<div class="titlepagemedium"> P. G. WODEHOUSE </div>
<div class="titlepagesmall">
<div><span class="smcap">HERBERT JENKINS LIMITED </span></div>
<div><span class="smcap">3 YORK STREET ST. JAMES’S </span></div>
<div><span class="smcap">LONDON S.W.1 * MCMXXIV </span></div>
</div>
<div class="titlepagesmalljumpjump"> A HERBERT JENKINS BOOK </div>
<div class="titlepagesmalljumpjump"> <i>Printed in Great Britain by </i> Butler & Tanner Ltd., <i>Frome and London </i> </div>
<div class="titlepagesmaller"> dedicated </div>
<div class="titlepagesmaller"> with </div>
<div class="titlepagesmaller"> esteem and gratitude </div>
<div class="titlepagesmaller"> to </div>
<div class="titlepagemediumer"> OLD BILL TOWNEND </div>
<div class="titlepagesmaller"> my friend from boyhood’s days </div>
<div class="titlepagesmaller"> who </div>
<div class="titlepagesmaller"> first introduced me </div>
<div class="titlepagesmaller"> to </div>
<div class="titlepagesmaller"> stanley featherstonehaugh ukridge </div>
<h2 class="contents1" id="TOC" > CONTENTS </h2>
<div class="contents2">
<div class="chchap"> CHAPTER </div>
<div class="chch"><SPAN href="#CH1"> I. Ukridge’s Dog College </SPAN></div>
<div class="chch"><SPAN href="#CH2"> II. Ukridge’s Accident Syndicate </SPAN></div>
<div class="chch"><SPAN href="#CH3"> III. The Début of Battling Billson </SPAN></div>
<div class="chch"><SPAN href="#CH4"> IV. First Aid for Dora </SPAN></div>
<div class="chch"><SPAN href="#CH5"> V. The Return of Battling Billson </SPAN></div>
<div class="chch"><SPAN href="#CH6"> VI. Ukridge Sees her Through </SPAN></div>
<div class="chch"><SPAN href="#CH7"> VII. No Wedding Bells for him </SPAN></div>
<div class="chch"><SPAN href="#CH8"> VIII. The Long Arm of Looney Coote </SPAN></div>
<div class="chch"><SPAN href="#CH9"> IX. The Exit of Battling Billson </SPAN></div>
<div class="chch"><SPAN href="#CH10"> X. Ukridge Rounds a Nasty Corner </SPAN></div>
</div>
<div class="titlepagelarge"> UKRIDGE </div>
<h2 id="CH1"> CHAPTER I </h2>
<div class="chtitle"> UKRIDGE'S DOG COLLEGE </div>
<p>“Laddie,” said Stanley Featherstonehaugh
Ukridge, that much-enduring man, helping
himself to my tobacco and slipping the pouch
absently into his pocket, “listen to me, you
son of Belial.”</p>
<p>“What?” I said, retrieving the pouch.</p>
<p>“Do you want to make an enormous fortune?”</p>
<p>“I do.”</p>
<p>“Then write my biography. Bung it down on paper,
and we’ll split the proceeds. I’ve been making a pretty
close study of your stuff lately, old horse, and it’s all
wrong. The trouble with you is that you don’t plumb
the well-springs of human nature and all that. You just
think up some rotten yarn about some-dam-thing-or-other
and shove it down. Now, if you tackled my life,
you’d have something worth writing about. Pots of
money in it, my boy—English serial rights and American
serial rights and book rights, and dramatic rights and
movie rights—well, you can take it from me that, at a
conservative estimate, we should clean up at least fifty
thousand pounds apiece.”</p>
<p>“As much as that?”</p>
<p>“Fully that. And listen, laddie, I’ll tell you what.
You’re a good chap and we’ve been pals for years, so I’ll
let you have my share of the English serial rights for a
hundred pounds down.”</p>
<p>“What makes you think I’ve got a hundred pounds?”</p>
<p>“Well, then, I’ll make it my share of the English and
American serial rights for fifty.”</p>
<p>“Your collar’s come off its stud.”</p>
<p>“How about my complete share of the whole dashed
outfit for twenty-five?”</p>
<p>“Not for me, thanks.”</p>
<p>“Then I’ll tell you what, old horse,” said Ukridge,
inspired. “Just lend me half a crown to be going on
with.”</p>
<div class="centered"> *
* *
* * </div>
<p>If the leading incidents of S. F. Ukridge’s disreputable
career are to be given to the public—and not, as some might
suggest, decently hushed up—I suppose I am the man to
write them. Ukridge and I have been intimate since the
days of school. Together we sported on the green, and
when he was expelled no one missed him more than I. An
unfortunate business, this expulsion. Ukridge’s generous
spirit, ever ill-attuned to school rules, caused him eventually
to break the solemnest of them all by sneaking out
at night to try his skill at the coco-nut-shies of the local
village fair; and his foresight in putting on scarlet
whiskers and a false nose for the expedition was completely
neutralised by the fact that he absent-mindedly
wore his school cap throughout the entire proceedings.
He left the next morning, regretted by all.</p>
<p>After this there was a hiatus of some years in our friendship.
I was at Cambridge, absorbing culture, and
Ukridge, as far as I could gather from his rare letters and
the reports of mutual acquaintances, flitting about the
world like a snipe. Somebody met him in New York,
just off a cattle-ship. Somebody else saw him in Buenos
Ayres. Somebody, again, spoke sadly of having been
pounced on by him at Monte Carlo and touched for a fiver.
It was not until I settled down in London that he came
back into my life. We met in Piccadilly one day, and
resumed our relations where they had been broken off.
Old associations are strong, and the fact that he was about
my build and so could wear my socks and shirts drew us
very close together.</p>
<p>Then he disappeared again, and it was a month or more
before I got news of him.</p>
<p>It was George Tupper who brought the news. George
was head of the school in my last year, and he has fulfilled
exactly the impeccable promise of those early days.
He is in the Foreign Office, doing well and much respected.
He has an earnest, pulpy heart and takes other people’s
troubles very seriously. Often he had mourned to me like
a father over Ukridge’s erratic progress through life, and
now, as he spoke, he seemed to be filled with a solemn joy,
as over a reformed prodigal.</p>
<p>“Have you heard about Ukridge?” said George Tupper.
“He has settled down at last. Gone to live with an aunt
of his who owns one of those big houses on Wimbledon
Common. A very rich woman. I am delighted. It will
be the making of the old chap.”</p>
<p>I suppose he was right in a way, but to me this tame
subsidence into companionship with a rich aunt in
Wimbledon seemed somehow an indecent, almost a tragic,
end to a colourful career like that of S. F. Ukridge. And
when I met the man a week later my heart grew heavier
still.</p>
<p>It was in Oxford Street at the hour when women come
up from the suburbs to shop; and he was standing among
the dogs and commissionaires outside Selfridge’s. His
arms were full of parcels, his face was set in a mask of
wan discomfort, and he was so beautifully dressed that
for an instant I did not recognise him. Everything which
the Correct Man wears was assembled on his person, from
the silk hat to the patent-leather boots; and, as he confided
to me in the first minute, he was suffering the tortures
of the damned. The boots pinched him, the hat
hurt his forehead, and the collar was worse than the hat
and boots combined.</p>
<p>“She makes me wear them,” he said, moodily, jerking
his head towards the interior of the store and uttering a
sharp howl as the movement caused the collar to gouge
his neck.</p>
<p>“Still,” I said, trying to turn his mind to happier things,
“you must be having a great time. George Tupper tells
me that your aunt is rich. I suppose you’re living off the
fat of the land.”</p>
<p>“The browsing and sluicing are good,” admitted
Ukridge. “But it’s a wearing life, laddie. A wearing
life, old horse.”</p>
<p>“Why don’t you come and see me sometimes?”</p>
<p>“I’m not allowed out at night.”</p>
<p>“Well, shall I come and see you?”</p>
<p>A look of poignant alarm shot out from under the silk
hat.</p>
<p>“Don’t dream of it, laddie,” said Ukridge, earnestly.
“Don’t dream of it. You’re a good chap—my best pal
and all that sort of thing—but the fact is, my standing in
the home’s none too solid even now, and one sight of you
would knock my prestige into hash. Aunt Julia would
think you worldly.”</p>
<p>“I’m not worldly.”</p>
<p>“Well, you look worldly. You wear a squash hat and
a soft collar. If you don’t mind my suggesting it, old
horse, I think, if I were you, I’d pop off now before she
comes out. Good-bye, laddie.”</p>
<p>“Ichabod!” I murmured sadly to myself as I passed
on down Oxford Street. “Ichabod!”</p>
<p>I should have had more faith. I should have known
my Ukridge better. I should have realised that a London
suburb could no more imprison that great man permanently
than Elba did Napoleon.</p>
<p>One afternoon, as I let myself into the house in Ebury
Street of which I rented at that time the bedroom and
sitting-room on the first floor, I came upon Bowles, my
landlord, standing in listening attitude at the foot of the
stairs.</p>
<p>“Good afternoon, sir,” said Bowles. “A gentleman is
waiting to see you. I fancy I heard him calling me a
moment ago.”</p>
<p>“Who is he?”</p>
<p>“A Mr. Ukridge, sir. He——”</p>
<p>A vast voice boomed out from above.</p>
<p>“Bowles, old horse!”</p>
<p>Bowles, like all other proprietors of furnished apartments
in the south-western district of London, was an
ex-butler, and about him, as about all ex-butlers, there
clung like a garment an aura of dignified superiority which
had never failed to crush my spirit. He was a man of
portly aspect, with a bald head and prominent eyes of a
lightish green—eyes that seemed to weigh me dispassionately
and find me wanting. “H’m!” they seemed to
say. “Young—very young. And not at all what I have
been accustomed to in the best places.” To hear this
dignitary addressed—and in a shout at that—as “old
horse” affected me with much the same sense of imminent
chaos as would afflict a devout young curate if he saw his
bishop slapped on the back. The shock, therefore, when
he responded not merely mildly but with what almost
amounted to camaraderie was numbing.</p>
<p>“Sir?” cooed Bowles.</p>
<p>“Bring me six bones and a corkscrew.”</p>
<p>“Very good, sir.”</p>
<p>Bowles retired, and I bounded upstairs and flung open
the door of my sitting-room.</p>
<p>“Great Scott!” I said, blankly.</p>
<p>The place was a sea of Pekingese dogs. Later investigation
reduced their numbers to six, but in that first
moment there seemed to be hundreds. Goggling eyes met
mine wherever I looked. The room was a forest of waving
tails. With his back against the mantelpiece, smoking
placidly, stood Ukridge.</p>
<p>“Hallo, laddie!” he said, with a genial wave of the
hand, as if to make me free of the place. “You’re just
in time. I’ve got to dash off and catch a train in a quarter
of an hour. Stop it, you mutts!” he bellowed, and the
six Pekingese, who had been barking steadily since my
arrival, stopped in mid-yap, and were still. Ukridge’s
personality seemed to exercise a magnetism over the
animal kingdom, from ex-butlers to Pekes, which bordered
on the uncanny. “I’m off to Sheep’s Cray, in
Kent. Taken a cottage there.”</p>
<p>“Are you going to live there?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“But what about your aunt?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’ve left her. Life is stern and life is earnest, and
if I mean to make a fortune I’ve got to bustle about and
not stay cooped up in a place like Wimbledon.”</p>
<p>“Something in that.”</p>
<p>“Besides which, she told me the very sight of me made
her sick and she never wanted to see me again.”</p>
<p>I might have guessed, directly I saw him, that some
upheaval had taken place. The sumptuous raiment which
had made him such a treat to the eye at our last meeting
was gone, and he was back in his pre-Wimbledon costume,
which was, as the advertisements say, distinctively
individual. Over grey flannel trousers, a golf coat, and
a brown sweater he wore like a royal robe a bright yellow
mackintosh. His collar had broken free from its stud and
showed a couple of inches of bare neck. His hair was
disordered, and his masterful nose was topped by a pair
of steel-rimmed pince-nez cunningly attached to his flapping
ears with ginger-beer wire. His whole appearance
spelled revolt.</p>
<p>Bowles manifested himself with a plateful of bones.</p>
<p>“That’s right. Chuck ’em down on the floor.”</p>
<p>“Very good, sir.”</p>
<p>“I like that fellow,” said Ukridge, as the door closed.
“We had a dashed interesting talk before you came in.
Did you know he had a cousin on the music-halls?”</p>
<p>“He hasn’t confided in me much.”</p>
<p>“He’s promised me an introduction to him later on.
May be useful to be in touch with a man who knows the
ropes. You see, laddie, I’ve hit on the most amazing
scheme.” He swept his arm round dramatically, overturning
a plaster cast of the Infant Samuel at Prayer.
“All right, all right, you can mend it with glue or something,
and, anyway, you’re probably better without it.
Yessir, I’ve hit on a great scheme. The idea of a thousand
years.”</p>
<p>“What’s that?”</p>
<p>“I’m going to train dogs.”</p>
<p>“Train dogs?”</p>
<p>“For the music-hall stage. Dog acts, you know.
Performing dogs. Pots of money in it. I start in a
modest way with these six. When I’ve taught ’em a few
tricks, I sell them to a fellow in the profession for a large
sum and buy twelve more. I train those, sell ’em for a
large sum, and with the money buy twenty-four more.
I train those——”</p>
<p>“Here, wait a minute.” My head was beginning to
swim. I had a vision of England paved with Pekingese
dogs, all doing tricks. “How do you know you’ll be able
to sell them?”</p>
<p>“Of course I shall. The demand’s enormous. Supply
can’t cope with it. At a conservative estimate I should
think I ought to scoop in four or five thousand pounds the
first year. That, of course, is before the business really
starts to expand.”</p>
<p>“I see.”</p>
<p>“When I get going properly, with a dozen assistants
under me and an organised establishment, I shall begin to
touch the big money. What I’m aiming at is a sort of
Dogs’ College out in the country somewhere. Big place
with a lot of ground. Regular classes and a set curriculum.
Large staff, each member of it with so many dogs under
his care, me looking on and superintending. Why, once
the thing starts moving it’ll run itself, and all I shall have
to do will be to sit back and endorse the cheques. It isn’t
as if I would have to confine my operations to England.
The demand for performing dogs is universal throughout
the civilised world. America wants performing dogs.
Australia wants performing dogs. Africa could do with a
few, I’ve no doubt. My aim, laddie, is gradually to get
a monopoly of the trade. I want everybody who needs
a performing dog of any description to come automatically
to me. And I’ll tell you what, laddie. If you like to
put up a bit of capital, I’ll let you in on the ground floor.”</p>
<p>“No, thanks.”</p>
<p>“All right. Have it your own way. Only don’t forget
that there was a fellow who put nine hundred dollars into
the Ford Car business when it was starting and he collected
a cool forty million. I say, is that clock right?
Great Scott! I’ll be missing my train. Help me mobilise
these dashed animals.”</p>
<p>Five minutes later, accompanied by the six Pekingese
and bearing about him a pound of my tobacco, three pairs
of my socks, and the remains of a bottle of whisky,
Ukridge departed in a taxi-cab for Charing Cross Station
to begin his life-work.</p>
<p>Perhaps six weeks passed, six quiet Ukridgeless weeks,
and then one morning I received an agitated telegram.
Indeed, it was not so much a telegram as a cry of anguish.
In every word of it there breathed the tortured spirit of a
great man who has battled in vain against overwhelming
odds. It was the sort of telegram which Job might have
sent off after a lengthy session with Bildad the Shuhite:—</p>
<p>“Come here immediately, laddie. Life and death
matter, old horse. Desperate situation. Don’t fail me.”</p>
<p>It stirred me like a bugle, I caught the next train.</p>
<p>The White Cottage, Sheep’s Cray—destined, presumably,
to become in future years an historic spot and a
Mecca for dog-loving pilgrims—was a small and battered
building standing near the main road to London at some
distance from the village. I found it without difficulty,
for Ukridge seemed to have achieved a certain celebrity
in the neighbourhood; but to effect an entry was a harder
task. I rapped for a full minute without result, then
shouted; and I was about to conclude that Ukridge was
not at home when the door suddenly opened. As I was
just giving a final bang at the moment, I entered the
house in a manner reminiscent of one of the Ballet Russe
practising a new and difficult step.</p>
<p>“Sorry, old horse,” said Ukridge. “Wouldn’t have
kept you waiting if I’d known who it was. Thought you
were Gooch, the grocer—goods supplied to the value of six
pounds three and a penny.”</p>
<p>“I see.”</p>
<p>“He keeps hounding me for his beastly money,” said
Ukridge, bitterly, as he led the way into the sitting-room.
“It’s a little hard. Upon my Sam it’s a little hard. I
come down here to inaugurate a vast business and do the
natives a bit of good by establishing a growing industry
in their midst, and the first thing you know they turn
round and bite the hand that was going to feed them.
I’ve been hampered and rattled by these blood-suckers
ever since I got here. A little trust, a little sympathy, a
little of the good old give-and-take spirit—that was all I
asked. And what happened? They wanted a bit on
account! Kept bothering me for a bit on account, I’ll
trouble you, just when I needed all my thoughts and all
my energy and every ounce of concentration at my
command for my extraordinarily difficult and delicate
work. <i>I </i> couldn’t give them a bit on account. Later on,
if they had only exercised reasonable patience, I would
no doubt have been in a position to settle their infernal
bills fifty times over. But the time was not ripe. I
reasoned with the men. I said, ‘Here am I, a busy man,
trying hard to educate six Pekingese dogs for the music-hall
stage, and you come distracting my attention and
impairing my efficiency by babbling about a bit on
account. It isn’t the pull-together spirit,’ I said. ‘It
isn’t the spirit that wins to wealth. These narrow petty-cash
ideas can never make for success.’ But no, they
couldn’t see it. They started calling here at all hours and
waylaying me in the public highways till life became an
absolute curse. And now what do you think has happened?”</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>“The dogs.”</p>
<p>“Got distemper?”</p>
<p>“No. Worse. My landlord’s pinched them as security
for his infernal rent! Sneaked the stock. Tied up the
assets. Crippled the business at the very outset. Have
you ever in your life heard of anything so dastardly? I
know I agreed to pay the damned rent weekly and I’m
about six weeks behind, but, my gosh! surely a man with
a huge enterprise on his hands isn’t supposed to have to
worry about these trifles when he’s occupied with the
most delicate——Well, I put all that to old Nickerson,
but a fat lot of good it did. So then I wired to you.”</p>
<p>“Ah!” I said, and there was a brief and pregnant
pause.</p>
<p>“I thought,” said Ukridge, meditatively, “that you
might be able to suggest somebody I could touch.”</p>
<p>He spoke in a detached and almost casual way, but his
eye was gleaming at me significantly, and I avoided it
with a sense of guilt. My finances at the moment were in
their customary unsettled condition—rather more so, in
fact, than usual, owing to unsatisfactory speculations at
Kempton Park on the previous Saturday; and it seemed
to me that, if ever there was a time for passing the buck,
this was it. I mused tensely. It was an occasion for
quick thinking.</p>
<p>“George Tupper!” I cried, on the crest of a brain-wave.</p>
<p>“George Tupper?” echoed Ukridge, radiantly, his
gloom melting like fog before the sun. “The very man,
by Gad! It’s a most amazing thing, but I never thought
of him. George Tupper, of course! Big-hearted George,
the old school-chum. He’ll do it like a shot and won’t
miss the money. These Foreign Office blokes have always
got a spare tenner or two tucked away in the old sock.
They pinch it out of the public funds. Rush back to
town, laddie, with all speed, get hold of Tuppy,
lush him up, and bite his ear for twenty quid. Now
is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the
party.”</p>
<p>I had been convinced that George Tupper would not
fail us, nor did he. He parted without a murmur—even
with enthusiasm. The consignment was one that might
have been made to order for him. As a boy, George used
to write sentimental poetry for the school magazine, and
now he is the sort of man who is always starting subscription
lists and getting up memorials and presentations.
He listened to my story with the serious official air which
these Foreign Office fellows put on when they are deciding
whether to declare war on Switzerland or send a firm note
to San Marino, and was reaching for his cheque-book
before I had been speaking two minutes. Ukridge’s sad
case seemed to move him deeply.</p>
<p>“Too bad,” said George. “So he is training dogs, is
he? Well, it seems very unfair that, if he has at last
settled down to real work, he should be hampered by
financial difficulties at the outset. We ought to do something
practical for him. After all, a loan of twenty pounds
cannot relieve the situation permanently.”</p>
<p>“I think you’re a bit optimistic if you’re looking on it
as a loan.”</p>
<p>“What Ukridge needs is capital.”</p>
<p>“He thinks that, too. So does Gooch, the grocer.”</p>
<p>“Capital,” repeated George Tupper, firmly, as if he
were reasoning with the plenipotentiary of some Great
Power. “Every venture requires capital at first.” He
frowned thoughtfully. “Where can we obtain capital
for Ukridge?”</p>
<p>“Rob a bank.”</p>
<p>George Tupper’s face cleared.</p>
<p>“I have it!” he said. “I will go straight over to
Wimbledon to-night and approach his aunt.”</p>
<p>“Aren’t you forgetting that Ukridge is about as popular
with her as a cold welsh rabbit?”</p>
<p>“There may be a temporary estrangement, but if I tell
her the facts and impress upon her that Ukridge is really
making a genuine effort to earn a living——”</p>
<p>“Well, try it if you like. But she will probably set the
parrot on to you.”</p>
<p>“It will have to be done diplomatically, of course. It
might be as well if you did not tell Ukridge what I propose
to do. I do not wish to arouse hopes which may not be
fulfilled.”</p>
<p>A blaze of yellow on the platform of Sheep’s Cray
Station next morning informed me that Ukridge had come
to meet my train. The sun poured down from a cloudless
sky, but it took more than sunshine to make Stanley
Featherstonehaugh Ukridge discard his mackintosh. He
looked like an animated blob of mustard.</p>
<p>When the train rolled in, he was standing in solitary
grandeur trying to light his pipe, but as I got out I perceived
that he had been joined by a sad-looking man, who,
from the rapid and earnest manner in which he talked
and the vehemence of his gesticulations, appeared to be
ventilating some theme on which he felt deeply. Ukridge
was looking warm and harassed, and, as I approached, I
could hear his voice booming in reply.</p>
<p>“My dear sir, my dear old horse, do be reasonable, do
try to cultivate the big, broad flexible outlook——”</p>
<p>He saw me and broke away—not unwillingly; and,
gripping my arm, drew me off along the platform. The
sad-looking man followed irresolutely.</p>
<p>“Have you got the stuff, laddie?” enquired Ukridge,
in a tense whisper. “Have you got it?”</p>
<p>“Yes, here it is.”</p>
<p>“Put it back, put it back!” moaned Ukridge in agony,
as I felt in my pocket. “Do you know who that was I was
talking to? Gooch, the grocer!”</p>
<p>“Goods supplied to the value of six pounds three and
a penny?”</p>
<p>“Absolutely!”</p>
<p>“Well, now’s your chance. Fling him a purse of gold.
That’ll make him look silly.”</p>
<p>“My dear old horse, I can’t afford to go about the place
squandering my cash simply in order to make grocers
look silly. That money is earmarked for Nickerson, my
landlord.”</p>
<p>“Oh! I say, I think the six pounds three and a penny
bird is following us.”</p>
<p>“Then for goodness’ sake, laddie, let’s get a move on!
If that man knew we had twenty quid on us, our lives
wouldn’t be safe. He’d make one spring.”</p>
<p>He hurried me out of the station and led the way up
a shady lane that wound off through the fields, slinking
furtively “like one that on a lonesome road doth walk in
fear and dread, and having once looked back walks on
and turns no more his head, because he knows a frightful
fiend doth close behind him tread.” As a matter of fact,
the frightful fiend had given up the pursuit after the first
few steps, and a moment later I drew this fact to Ukridge’s
attention, for it was not the sort of day on which to break
walking records unnecessarily.</p>
<p>He halted, relieved, and mopped his spacious brow with
a handkerchief which I recognised as having once been
my property.</p>
<p>“Thank goodness we’ve shaken him off,” he said.
“Not a bad chap in his way, I believe—a good husband
and father, I’m told, and sings in the church choir. But
no vision. That’s what he lacks, old horse—vision. He
can’t understand that all vast industrial enterprises have
been built up on a system of liberal and cheerful credit.
Won’t realise that credit is the life-blood of commerce.
Without credit commerce has no elasticity. And if commerce
has no elasticity what dam’ good is it?”</p>
<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
<p>“Nor does anybody else. Well, now that he’s gone, you
can give me that money. Did old Tuppy cough up
cheerfully?”</p>
<p>“Blithely.”</p>
<p>“I knew it,” said Ukridge, deeply moved, “I knew it.
A good fellow. One of the best. I’ve always liked Tuppy.
A man you can rely on. Some day, when I get going on a
big scale, he shall have this back a thousandfold. I’m
glad you brought small notes.”</p>
<p>“Why?”</p>
<p>“I want to scatter ’em about on the table in front of
this Nickerson blighter.”</p>
<p>“Is this where he lives?”</p>
<p>We had come to a red-roofed house, set back from the
road amidst trees. Ukridge wielded the knocker forcefully.</p>
<p>“Tell Mr. Nickerson,” he said to the maid, “that Mr.
Ukridge has called and would like a word.”</p>
<p>About the demeanour of the man who presently entered
the room into which we had been shown there was that
subtle but well-marked something which stamps your
creditor all the world over. Mr. Nickerson was a man of
medium height, almost completely surrounded by whiskers,
and through the shrubbery he gazed at Ukridge with
frozen eyes, shooting out waves of deleterious animal
magnetism. You could see at a glance that he was not
fond of Ukridge. Take him for all in all, Mr. Nickerson
looked like one of the less amiable prophets of the Old
Testament about to interview the captive monarch of the
Amalekites.</p>
<p>“Well?” he said, and I have never heard the word
spoken in a more forbidding manner.</p>
<p>“I’ve come about the rent.”</p>
<p>“Ah!” said Mr. Nickerson, guardedly.</p>
<p>“To pay it,” said Ukridge.</p>
<p>“To pay it!” ejaculated Mr. Nickerson, incredulously.</p>
<p>“Here!” said Ukridge, and with a superb gesture flung
money on the table.</p>
<p>I understood now why the massive-minded man had
wanted small notes. They made a brave display. There
was a light breeze blowing in through the open window,
and so musical a rustling did it set up as it played about
the heaped-up wealth that Mr. Nickerson’s austerity
seemed to vanish like breath off a razor-blade. For a
moment a dazed look came into his eyes and he swayed
slightly; then, as he started to gather up the money,
he took on the benevolent air of a bishop blessing pilgrims.
As far as Mr. Nickerson was concerned, the sun was up.</p>
<p>“Why, thank you, Mr. Ukridge, I’m sure,” he said.
“Thank you very much. No hard feelings, I trust?”</p>
<p>“Not on my side, old horse,” responded Ukridge,
affably. “Business is business.”</p>
<p>“Exactly.”</p>
<p>“Well, I may as well take those dogs now,” said Ukridge,
helping himself to a cigar from a box which he had just
discovered on the mantelpiece and putting a couple more
in his pocket in the friendliest way. “The sooner they’re
back with me, the better. They’ve lost a day’s education
as it is.”</p>
<p>“Why, certainly, Mr. Ukridge; certainly. They are
in the shed at the bottom of the garden. I will get them
for you at once.”</p>
<p>He retreated through the door, babbling ingratiatingly.</p>
<p>“Amazing how fond these blokes are of money,” sighed
Ukridge. “It’s a thing I don’t like to see. Sordid, I call
it. That blighter’s eyes were gleaming, positively gleaming,
laddie, as he scooped up the stuff. Good cigars these,”
he added, pocketing three more.</p>
<p>There was a faltering footstep outside, and Mr. Nickerson
re-entered the room. The man appeared to have
something on his mind. A glassy look was in his whisker-bordered
eyes, and his mouth, though it was not easy to
see it through the jungle, seemed to me to be sagging
mournfully. He resembled a minor prophet who has
been hit behind the ear with a stuffed eel-skin.</p>
<p>“Mr. Ukridge!”</p>
<p>“Hallo?”</p>
<p>“The—the little dogs!”</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“The little dogs!”</p>
<p>“What about them?”</p>
<p>“They have gone!”</p>
<p>“Gone?”</p>
<p>“Run away!”</p>
<p>“Run away? How the devil could they run away?”</p>
<p>“There seems to have been a loose board at the back
of the shed. The little dogs must have wriggled through.
There is no trace of them to be found.”</p>
<p>Ukridge flung up his arms despairingly. He swelled
like a captive balloon. His pince-nez rocked on his nose,
his mackintosh flapped menacingly, and his collar sprang
off its stud. He brought his fist down with a crash on
the table.</p>
<p>“Upon my Sam!”</p>
<p>“I am extremely sorry——”</p>
<p>“Upon my Sam!” cried Ukridge. “It’s hard. It’s
pretty hard. I come down here to inaugurate a great
business, which would eventually have brought trade and
prosperity to the whole neighbourhood, and I have hardly
had time to turn round and attend to the preliminary
details of the enterprise when this man comes and sneaks
my dogs. And now he tells me with a light laugh——”</p>
<p>“Mr. Ukridge, I assure you——”</p>
<p>“Tells me with a light laugh that they’ve gone. Gone!
Gone where? Why, dash it, they may be all over the
county. A fat chance I’ve got of ever seeing them
again. Six valuable Pekingese, already educated practically
to the stage where they could have been sold at an
enormous profit——”</p>
<p>Mr. Nickerson was fumbling guiltily, and now he produced
from his pocket a crumpled wad of notes, which he
thrust agitatedly upon Ukridge, who waved them away
with loathing.</p>
<p>“This gentleman,” boomed Ukridge, indicating me
with a sweeping gesture, “happens to be a lawyer. It is
extremely lucky that he chanced to come down to-day
to pay me a visit. Have you followed the proceedings
closely?”</p>
<p>I said I had followed them very closely.</p>
<p>“Is it your opinion that an action will lie?”</p>
<p>I said it seemed highly probable, and this expert ruling
appeared to put the final touch on Mr. Nickerson’s collapse.
Almost tearfully he urged the notes on Ukridge.</p>
<p>“What’s this?” said Ukridge, loftily.</p>
<p>“I—I thought, Mr. Ukridge, that, if it were agreeable
to you, you might consent to take your money back, and—and
consider the episode closed.”</p>
<p>Ukridge turned to me with raised eyebrows.</p>
<p>“Ha!” he cried. “Ha, ha!”</p>
<p>“Ha, ha!” I chorused, dutifully.</p>
<p>“He thinks that he can close the episode by giving me
my money back. Isn’t that rich?”</p>
<p>“Fruity,” I agreed.</p>
<p>“Those dogs were worth hundreds of pounds, and he
thinks he can square me with a rotten twenty. Would
you have believed it if you hadn’t heard it with your own
ears, old horse?”</p>
<p>“Never!”</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you what I’ll do,” said Ukridge, after thought.
“I’ll take this money.” Mr. Nickerson thanked him.
“And there are one or two trifling accounts which want
settling with some of the local tradesmen. You will
square those——”</p>
<p>“Certainly, Mr. Ukridge, certainly.”</p>
<p>“And after that—well, I’ll have to think it over. If I
decide to institute proceedings my lawyer will communicate
with you in due course.”</p>
<p>And we left the wretched man, cowering despicably
behind his whiskers.</p>
<p>It seemed to me, as we passed down the tree-shaded
lane and out into the white glare of the road, that Ukridge
was bearing himself in his hour of disaster with a rather
admirable fortitude. His stock-in-trade, the life-blood
of his enterprise, was scattered all over Kent, probably
never to return, and all that he had to show on the other
side of the balance-sheet was the cancelling of a few weeks’
back rent and the paying-off of Gooch, the grocer, and his
friends. It was a situation which might well have
crushed the spirit of an ordinary man, but Ukridge seemed
by no means dejected. Jaunty, rather. His eyes shone
behind their pince-nez and he whistled a rollicking air.
When presently he began to sing, I felt that it was time
to create a diversion.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Who, me?” said Ukridge, buoyantly. “Oh, I’m
coming back to town on the next train. You don’t mind
hoofing it to the next station, do you? It’s only five
miles. It might be a trifle risky to start from Sheep’s
Cray.”</p>
<p>“Why risky?”</p>
<p>“Because of the dogs, of course.”</p>
<p>“Dogs?”</p>
<p>Ukridge hummed a gay strain.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes. I forgot to tell you about that. I’ve got
’em.”</p>
<p>“What?”</p>
<p>“Yes. I went out late last night and pinched them out
of the shed.” He chuckled amusedly. “Perfectly simple.
Only needed a clear, level head. I borrowed a dead cat
and tied a string to it, legged it to old Nickerson’s garden
after dark, dug a board out of the back of the shed, and
shoved my head down and chirruped. The dogs came
trickling out, and I hared off, towing old Colonel Cat on
his string. Great run while it lasted, laddie. Hounds
picked up the scent right away and started off in a bunch
at fifty miles an hour. Cat and I doing a steady fifty-five.
Thought every minute old Nickerson would hear
and start blazing away with a gun, but nothing happened.
I led the pack across country for a run of twenty minutes
without a check, parked the dogs in my sitting-room, and
so to bed. Took it out of me, by gosh! Not so young
as I was.”</p>
<p>I was silent for a moment, conscious of a feeling almost
of reverence. This man was undoubtedly spacious.
There had always been something about Ukridge that
dulled the moral sense.</p>
<p>“Well,” I said at length, “you’ve certainly got vision.”</p>
<p>“Yes?” said Ukridge, gratified.</p>
<p>“<i>And </i> the big, broad, flexible outlook.”</p>
<p>“Got to, laddie, nowadays. The foundation of a
successful business career.”</p>
<p>“And what’s the next move?”</p>
<p>We were drawing near to the White Cottage. It stood
and broiled in the sunlight, and I hoped that there might
be something cool to drink inside it. The window of the
sitting-room was open, and through it came the yapping of
Pekingese.</p>
<p>“Oh, I shall find another cottage somewhere else,” said
Ukridge, eyeing his little home with a certain sentimentality.
“That won’t be hard. Lots of cottages all over
the place. And then I shall buckle down to serious work.
You’ll be astounded at the progress I’ve made already.
In a minute I’ll show you what those dogs can do.”</p>
<p>“They can bark all right.”</p>
<p>“Yes. They seem excited about something. You
know, laddie, I’ve had a great idea. When I saw you at
your rooms my scheme was to specialise in performing
dogs for the music-halls—what you might call professional
dogs. But I’ve been thinking it over, and now
I don’t see why I shouldn’t go in for developing amateur
talent as well. Say you have a dog—Fido, the household
pet—and you think it would brighten the home if he could
do a few tricks from time to time. Well, you’re a busy
man, you haven’t the time to give up to teaching him.
So you just tie a label to his collar and ship him off for a
month to the Ukridge Dog College, and back he comes,
thoroughly educated. No trouble, no worry, easy terms.
Upon my Sam, I’m not sure there isn’t more money in
the amateur branch than in the professional. I don’t see
why eventually dog owners shouldn’t send their dogs to
me as a regular thing, just as they send their sons to Eton
and Winchester. My golly! this idea’s beginning to
develop. I’ll tell you what—how would it be to issue
special collars to all dogs which have graduated from my
college? Something distinctive which everybody would
recognise. See what I mean? Sort of badge of honour.
Fellow with a dog entitled to wear the Ukridge collar
would be in a position to look down on the bloke whose
dog hadn’t got one. Gradually it would get so that anybody
in a decent social position would be ashamed to be
seen out with a non-Ukridge dog. The thing would
become a landslide. Dogs would pour in from all corners
of the country. More work than I could handle. Have
to start branches. The scheme’s colossal. Millions in it,
my boy! Millions!” He paused with his fingers on the
handle of the front door. “Of course,” he went on,
“just at present it’s no good blinking the fact that I’m
hampered and handicapped by lack of funds and can only
approach the thing on a small scale. What it amounts to,
laddie, is that somehow or other I’ve got to get capital.”</p>
<p>It seemed the moment to spring the glad news.</p>
<p>“I promised him I wouldn’t mention it,” I said, “for
fear it might lead to disappointment, but as a matter of
fact George Tupper is trying to raise some capital for you.
I left him last night starting out to get it.”</p>
<p>“George Tupper!”—Ukridge’s eyes dimmed with a not
unmanly emotion—“George Tupper! By Gad, that
fellow is the salt of the earth. Good, loyal fellow! A
true friend. A man you can rely on. Upon my Sam, if
there were more fellows about like old Tuppy, there
wouldn’t be all this modern pessimism and unrest. Did
he seem to have any idea where he could raise a bit of
capital for me?”</p>
<p>“Yes. He went round to tell your aunt about your
coming down here to train those Pekes, and——What’s
the matter?”</p>
<p>A fearful change had come over Ukridge’s jubilant front.
His eyes bulged, his jaw sagged. With the addition of
a few feet of grey whiskers he would have looked exactly
like the recent Mr. Nickerson.</p>
<p>“My aunt?” he mumbled, swaying on the door-handle.</p>
<p>“Yes. What’s the matter? He thought, if he told
her all about it, she might relent and rally round.”</p>
<p>The sigh of a gallant fighter at the end of his strength
forced its way up from Ukridge’s mackintosh-covered
bosom.</p>
<p>“Of all the dashed, infernal, officious, meddling, muddling,
fat-headed, interfering asses,” he said, wanly,
“George Tupper is the worst.”</p>
<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“The man oughtn’t to be at large. He’s a public
menace.”</p>
<p>“But——”</p>
<p>“Those dogs <i>belong </i> to my aunt. I pinched them when
she chucked me out!”</p>
<p>Inside the cottage the Pekingese were still yapping
industriously.</p>
<p>“Upon my Sam,” said Ukridge, “it’s a little hard.”</p>
<p>I think he would have said more, but at this point a
voice spoke with a sudden and awful abruptness from the
interior of the cottage. It was a woman’s voice, a quiet,
steely voice, a voice, it seemed to me, that suggested cold
eyes, a beaky nose, and hair like gun-metal.</p>
<p>“Stanley!”</p>
<p>That was all it said, but it was enough. Ukridge’s eye
met mine in a wild surmise. He seemed to shrink into
his mackintosh like a snail surprised while eating lettuce.</p>
<p>“Stanley!”</p>
<p>“Yes, Aunt Julia?” quavered Ukridge.</p>
<p>“Come here. I wish to speak to you.”</p>
<p>“Yes, Aunt Julia.”</p>
<p>I sidled out into the road. Inside the cottage the yapping
of the Pekingese had become quite hysterical. I
found myself trotting, and then—though it was a warm day—running
quite rapidly. I could have stayed if I had
wanted to, but somehow I did not want to. Something
seemed to tell me that on this holy domestic scene I should
be an intruder.</p>
<p>What it was that gave me that impression I do not
know—probably vision or the big, broad, flexible outlook.</p>
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